For the generation who had witnessed the Millennium
year, short for "Y2K" i.e. year 2000 probably has brought us many memories.
And for those who can still remember, at the eve of the Millennium, people set aside
unresolved private or political issues around the globe; it has actually brought
a brief spell of global unity through wild celebration by partying on the streets
or disco, private parties, good wines/cigars, nice hugs and greetings etc. On the
darker side, it was also being well remembered as one of the biggest scam in the
history of IT, the influx of billions of cash income courtesy of Millennium bug-fixing
programs by US companies globally had Dow Jones hit an all time high at one time.
Merchants were also busy riding high on this rare occasion by releasing series of
commemorative mechanized goods to spearhead sales. Some were good efforts, most were
opportunistic works that bear little remembrance value today. It happens on many
sectors, photographic equipment market wasn't spared.

Nikon did surprised many by releasing a remake of old rangefinder Nikon S3 chrome
classic in year 2000. It was specifically mentioned as a commemorative "Year
2000 Limited Edition" model. I wasn't sure why it was not chosen to release
as a Nikon SP which has more significant value as a collectible piece but it did
generated a wave of hype among Nikon enthusiasts. But probably cost of remaking an
old classic could be damn high and requires many sequential releases to even break
even initial investment. So, we saw the second and third release of the Nikon S3
Limited Edition Black at second half of the 2000 and an eventual 2,500 units of Nikon
SP Black in January 14, 2005. Shown here are the February, 2000 Nikon S3 Chrome and
June release of the Nikon S3 Limited Edition Black.

For approx. USD4,500-00* one would expect Nikon can provide a better or more presentable
packing rather than a corrugated box such as this. Well to be fair, the inner presentation
box that holds the camera/lens is much better in quality.

* 480,000.00 JPY = 4,456.62 USD

USD4,500-00 x 2,500 units (original
issued quantity, excluding add-on volume to satisfy additional request from overseas
market) makes up to about USD
11 million for this Nikon
S3 reproduction project. IF assuming some references were correct, there were 7,000-8,000
units were being produced eventually, this would make up to approx. USD33 million or more. There were sources from Japan that had claimed if the original
issued quantity of 2,500 unit was strictly followed - each S3 produced would cost
Nikon to subsidize each unit that rolled out from their assembly plant. I am not
sure how much would it cost in a modern costing method if the entire camera was mechanically
rebuilt in its entire production flow. But certainly, Nikon was not here to patch
the sentimental element or treating it as part of a corporate re-branding programme
and/or trying to present their faithful with a old time classic reissued.